A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Sri Lanka says international war crimes probe would bring 'chaos'
(Reuters) - An international inquiry into war crimes in Sri Lanka would
bring "chaos," and the government's national reconciliation process must
be given several more years to work, a top aide to Sri Lanka's
president said on Monday.
Lalith Weeratunga, in Washington to lobby against calls for such an
inquiry, said Sri Lanka needed at least five years from the July 2012
date the government regards as the start of its reconciliation process
for the effort to take root.
"After 26 years of conflict ... we want to make it a sustainable peace.
It's a very delicate, delicate process. Reconciliation is not a task
that can be achieved in a day or two," said Weeratunga, who is secretary
to President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Sri Lanka's top civil servant.
The final few months of Sri Lanka's long civil war in 2009 were by far
the bloodiest, and both the government and Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) rebels blame each other for the deaths of tens of thousands
of mainly Tamil civilians during that period.
The United Nations has called on Sri Lanka to punish those in the
military involved in atrocities, and U.S. Embassy officials in Colombo
say Washington plans to introduce a resolution calling for an
international investigation at the March session of the U.N. Human
Rights Council.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said in November he would push for
an international inquiry if Sri Lanka did not conclude an independent
investigation by March.
U.S. Embassy officials say the United States will demand that the
government investigate other abuses as well as alleged war crimes,
including lack of progress in reconciliation, abductions of
anti-government critics, attacks on churches and mosques and the media,
and alleged restrictions on freedom of association and labour union
activity.
"HUGE CHAOS"
But Weeratunga rejected the charges and said an international inquiry
would only reopen old wounds, as it would require investigation of all
those involved in the conflict, including former rebels and Indian
peacekeepers as well as the armed forces.
"There would be huge chaos in the country ... armed forces that
liberated the country from terrorism would again be put to a judicial
test. That is really going to reduce the morale of the army. These are
things that need to be considered very carefully," he told Reuters in an
interview.
"Why single out Sri Lanka for an international inquiry when ... other
countries that have gone through more difficult issues are not be
investigated?," he asked.
"If there is an international investigation, the whole period has to be
investigated - from the 1980s onward - which includes the two-year
tenure of the Indian peacekeeping force, which will upset India, which
will upset our relationship with India."
Weeratunga said the government needed more time for its efforts to
resolve land disputes, resettle people displaced by war and improve
people's livelihoods.
He also said the government was investigating 13,000 cases of missing
persons, a task complicated by the unwillingness of countries like
Britain to provide information on people thought to be living there.
Ten cases of attacks on churches and mosques were "being dealt with
severely," he said, but added it took time to probe cases where there
was no evidence as to who carried them out.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom in Washington and Shihar Aneez in Colombo; editing by Peter Cooney and G Crosse)